ESPN Tests The Waters 🎲

ESPN, Disney’s sports network, might cash a big check. 💰 ESPN is supposedly negotiating a deal with two sportsbooks to license its brand for sports betting products. The deal is expected to be worth at least $3 billion.

Rumor has it that ESPN held talks with casino operator Caesars, as well as online gambling company DraftKings. ESPN already has marketing partnerships with both companies. But this would be a bit of an upgrade. The deal would (potentially) allow both companies to rename their sportsbook after ESPN and use its branding. In exchange, ESPN wants Caesars and DraftKings to spend lots of money advertising on their network.

The deal isn’t a done deal just yet. However, the deal would likely appease executives who do not want ESPN to be directly involved in gambling transactions, but who do want to capitalize on the sports betting boom. On the other hand, some investors might feel that this is a missed opportunity — ESPN has a reputation for dragging on Disney’s profits, and it could have built its own sportsbook business without the help of third-parties. Alternatively, ESPN even could have acquired a smaller sports betting company. 🤷

As millions of sports fans pull away from cable, ESPN has grown its own subscription business. Some of the network’s programming is now directly dedicated to betting and wagers, among other things.

$DIS rose 2.03% today on the news.

Plug Power Is Charged Up

Plug Power hasn’t given investors much to be excited about over the last few years, but today’s news has people (and its stock price) charged up again. So let’s see what happened. 👇

The alternative-energy company, which provides hydrogen fuel cell technology, finalized a deal with the Department of Energy (DOE) for a $1.6 billion loan facility. This critical funding comes at a time when the company has faced immense liquidity issues, issuing a going-corn warning last quarter and disclosing a secondary share offering of up to $1 billion. 💸

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Thailand Scores Major EV Win

Thailand has been helping lead the electric vehicle (EV) push, with the second-biggest economy in Southeast Asia looking to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. ♻️

The country is known as the “Detroit of Asia,” serving as a major manufacturing hub. As part of that, it’s looking to make 30% of its car output electric by 2030 so that it doesn’t lose its leadership position in the EV transition. Its government is putting up major funds to help fund that, approving $970 million in tax cuts and subsidies to help encourage demand and boost local production. ⚡

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AI’s Copyright Crisis Begins

We all knew copyright law would be a key issue at the heart of the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution, but we didn’t know when. Well, the time has come. ⌛

Today, The New York Times filed a lawsuit against Microsoft and OpenAI, accusing them of infringing copyright and abusing the newspaper’s intellectual property. In its court filing, the publisher said it looks to hold the two companies accountable for the “unlawful copying and use of The Times’s uniquely valuable works,” claiming billions in statutory and actual damages.

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Pfizer’s Flop Continues

It’s been a rough ride for pharmaceutical giant Pfizer since the end of the pandemic, and that rollercoaster ride continues today. 🎢

The company last announced earnings in October but needed to update Wall Street on its 2024 forecast. It cited weak demand for its Covid products as the reason for a weaker-than-anticipated revenue and earnings forecast.

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